Michael Gerson on the libertarian Jesus
Washington Post columnist Michael Gerson (with whom we often disagree on the issues now dividing the Anglican Communion) had a column this week that makes a challenge to the religious right. It responded to those who assert that the Gospel opposes government programs for the poor:
"Common sense and the Scriptures," argues Sen. Tom Coburn, "show that true giving and compassion require sacrifice by the giver. This is why Jesus told the rich young ruler to sell his possessions, not his neighbor's possessions. Spending other people's money is not compassionate."It is not my purpose to pick on the senator from Oklahoma (once again); he is a man of principle. And he is merely restating a fairly common view: that compassion is a private virtue, not a public one, and that religious conscience concerns the former and not the latter.
But this is a theological assertion, not a political one. And as theology, it is flawed.
It is true that Jesus was not a political activist; he joined no party and issued no Contract With the Roman Empire. But it is a stretch to interpret his personal challenge to the rich young ruler as a biblical foundation for libertarianism.
The Jewish tradition in which Jesus lived and taught demanded that just rulers make a minimal provision for the poor, including no-interest loans and the distribution of agricultural commodities. (Look it up: Exodus 22:25-27 and Deuteronomy 24:19-21.) The apostle Paul held a high view of government's role in promoting justice and urged the willing payment of taxes -- a biblical demand more severe, for some of us, than all those sexual prohibitions. And Jesus's followers, fanning out along Roman roads, eventually expressed strong views on slavery, infanticide and the debasement of women -- political views that followed naturally from their belief in a radical equality before God.
The great evangelical reformers of the 18th and 19th centuries -- from John Wesley to William Wilberforce to Lord Shaftesbury -- certainly believed that the teachings of Jesus had implications for enslaved Africans and children toiling in mills. Shaftesbury, a lifelong Tory, focused in Parliament on the plight of the mentally ill, on young chimney sweeps who often died of testicular cancer, on the 30,000 homeless children of Dickensian London. One biographer wrote of Shaftesbury: "No man has in fact ever done more to lessen the extent of human misery or to add to the sum total of human happiness."
This, one assumes, is a historical judgment a conservative politician would covet.
. . .
Private compassion cannot replace Medicaid or provide AIDS drugs to millions of people in Africa for the rest of their lives. In these cases, a role for government is necessary and compassionate -- the expression of conservative commitments to the general welfare and the value of every human life.
For millennia, artists, thinkers and politicians have shaped their image of Jesus, often into a mirror image of themselves. But the goal of Christianity is to allow Him to shape us, not the other way around. And just as Jesus the leftist revolutionary is a distortion, so is Jesus the libertarian.
Read it all here.

All well and good, but he remains yoked to the odious bigot Peter Akinola. Let him renounce Akinola's willingness to use the power of the state against his theological opponents, let him insist that the Church of Nigeria (of which he is a member), stop its smear campaign against Davis MacIyalla, let him call for a complete accounting of the Christian Association of Nigeria's role in the massacre of Yelwa in 2004 (when Akinola was CAN's president), then he can come talk to us about Jesus. All this op-ed theologizing on his part is sickening in light of the evil in which he is complicit.
Jim Naughton
Posted by Jim Naughton
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June 1, 2008 4:18 PM
All of the concern regarding his links to disagreeable sides in the Anglican Communion controversies aside, Gerson makes the unfortunate mistake of conflating libertarianism with the agenda of the far right of the GOP. I find it telling that he quotes from a Republican senator and references ideas of other Republicans, then seems to switch gears and ties that with libertarian ideas. Perhaps my understanding is mistaken, but that seems like an equivocation to me.
Libertarianism (with a small l) as a political ideology doesn't bear much resemblance at all to anything that either of the major parties offer in the way of solutions to our nation's many crises.
That said, I basically agree with Gerson's thesis: you can't make an argument advocating for libertarianism from the Scriptures, saying that the Bible supports a certain modern political expression or political philosophy. You can make an argument that Scripture points to principles of justice, equality, love, etc., and then based on that, a person could make an argument that one political philosophy or machinery is most effective at actually bringing about the ideal state the Scriptures always call us to strive towards.
But the political world of Jesus' time doesn't match up well with any of our current American political expressions – so the Church as a whole would do well to stay out of politics and stick with true religion and the good it inspires us to bring about in the world.
Martin Pommerenke
Posted by cantor
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June 2, 2008 2:01 AM